The stability of care preferences following acute illness: a mixed methods prospective cohort study of frail older people

Abstract Background Patient preferences are integral to person-centred care, but preference stability is poorly understood in older people, who may experience fluctuant illness trajectories with episodes of acute illness. We aimed to describe, and explore influences on the stability of care preferen...

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Main Authors: S. N. Etkind, N. Lovell, A. E. Bone, P. Guo, C. Nicholson, F. E. M. Murtagh, I. J. Higginson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-09-01
Series:BMC Geriatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12877-020-01725-2
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spelling doaj-92f7b40ab54c483fa6e23afef3c205e92020-11-25T03:47:23ZengBMCBMC Geriatrics1471-23182020-09-0120111310.1186/s12877-020-01725-2The stability of care preferences following acute illness: a mixed methods prospective cohort study of frail older peopleS. N. Etkind0N. Lovell1A. E. Bone2P. Guo3C. Nicholson4F. E. M. Murtagh5I. J. Higginson6Cicely Saunders Institute, Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing Midwifery and Palliative Care, King’s College LondonCicely Saunders Institute, Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing Midwifery and Palliative Care, King’s College LondonCicely Saunders Institute, Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing Midwifery and Palliative Care, King’s College LondonCicely Saunders Institute, Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing Midwifery and Palliative Care, King’s College LondonSt Christopher’s HospiceCicely Saunders Institute, Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing Midwifery and Palliative Care, King’s College LondonCicely Saunders Institute, Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing Midwifery and Palliative Care, King’s College LondonAbstract Background Patient preferences are integral to person-centred care, but preference stability is poorly understood in older people, who may experience fluctuant illness trajectories with episodes of acute illness. We aimed to describe, and explore influences on the stability of care preferences in frail older people following recent acute illness. Methods Mixed-methods prospective cohort study with dominant qualitative component, parallel data collection and six-month follow up. Study population: age ≥ 65, Rockwood Clinical Frailty score ≥ 5, recent acute illness requiring acute assessment/hospitalisation. Participants rated the importance of six preferences (to extend life, improve quality of life, remain independent, be comfortable, support ‘those close to me’, and stay out of hospital) at baseline, 12 and 24 weeks using a 0–4 scale, and ranked the most important. A maximum-variation sub-sample additionally contributed serial in-depth qualitative interviews. We described preference stability using frequencies and proportions, and undertook thematic analysis to explore influences on preference stability. Results 90/192 (45%) of potential participants consented. 82/90 (91%) answered the baseline questionnaire; median age 84, 63% female. Seventeen undertook qualitative interviews. Most participants consistently rated five of the six preferences as important (range 68–89%). ‘Extend life’ was rated important by fewer participants (32–43%). Importance ratings were stable in 61–86% of cases. The preference ranked most important was unstable in 82% of participants. Preference stability was supported by five influences: the presence of family support; both positive or negative care experiences; preferences being concordant with underlying values; where there was slowness of recovery from illness; and when preferences linked to long term goals. Preference change was related to changes in health awareness, or life events; if preferences were specific to a particular context, or multiple concurrent preferences existed, these were also more liable to change. Conclusions Preferences were largely stable following acute illness. Stability was reinforced by care experiences and the presence of family support. Where preferences were unstable, this usually related to changing health awareness. Consideration of these influences during preference elicitation or advance care planning will support delivery of responsive care to meet preferences. Obtaining longer-term data across diverse ethnic groups is needed in future research.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12877-020-01725-2Patient preferenceFrail elderlyAgedPatient-centered carePalliative careCohort studies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. N. Etkind
N. Lovell
A. E. Bone
P. Guo
C. Nicholson
F. E. M. Murtagh
I. J. Higginson
spellingShingle S. N. Etkind
N. Lovell
A. E. Bone
P. Guo
C. Nicholson
F. E. M. Murtagh
I. J. Higginson
The stability of care preferences following acute illness: a mixed methods prospective cohort study of frail older people
BMC Geriatrics
Patient preference
Frail elderly
Aged
Patient-centered care
Palliative care
Cohort studies
author_facet S. N. Etkind
N. Lovell
A. E. Bone
P. Guo
C. Nicholson
F. E. M. Murtagh
I. J. Higginson
author_sort S. N. Etkind
title The stability of care preferences following acute illness: a mixed methods prospective cohort study of frail older people
title_short The stability of care preferences following acute illness: a mixed methods prospective cohort study of frail older people
title_full The stability of care preferences following acute illness: a mixed methods prospective cohort study of frail older people
title_fullStr The stability of care preferences following acute illness: a mixed methods prospective cohort study of frail older people
title_full_unstemmed The stability of care preferences following acute illness: a mixed methods prospective cohort study of frail older people
title_sort stability of care preferences following acute illness: a mixed methods prospective cohort study of frail older people
publisher BMC
series BMC Geriatrics
issn 1471-2318
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Abstract Background Patient preferences are integral to person-centred care, but preference stability is poorly understood in older people, who may experience fluctuant illness trajectories with episodes of acute illness. We aimed to describe, and explore influences on the stability of care preferences in frail older people following recent acute illness. Methods Mixed-methods prospective cohort study with dominant qualitative component, parallel data collection and six-month follow up. Study population: age ≥ 65, Rockwood Clinical Frailty score ≥ 5, recent acute illness requiring acute assessment/hospitalisation. Participants rated the importance of six preferences (to extend life, improve quality of life, remain independent, be comfortable, support ‘those close to me’, and stay out of hospital) at baseline, 12 and 24 weeks using a 0–4 scale, and ranked the most important. A maximum-variation sub-sample additionally contributed serial in-depth qualitative interviews. We described preference stability using frequencies and proportions, and undertook thematic analysis to explore influences on preference stability. Results 90/192 (45%) of potential participants consented. 82/90 (91%) answered the baseline questionnaire; median age 84, 63% female. Seventeen undertook qualitative interviews. Most participants consistently rated five of the six preferences as important (range 68–89%). ‘Extend life’ was rated important by fewer participants (32–43%). Importance ratings were stable in 61–86% of cases. The preference ranked most important was unstable in 82% of participants. Preference stability was supported by five influences: the presence of family support; both positive or negative care experiences; preferences being concordant with underlying values; where there was slowness of recovery from illness; and when preferences linked to long term goals. Preference change was related to changes in health awareness, or life events; if preferences were specific to a particular context, or multiple concurrent preferences existed, these were also more liable to change. Conclusions Preferences were largely stable following acute illness. Stability was reinforced by care experiences and the presence of family support. Where preferences were unstable, this usually related to changing health awareness. Consideration of these influences during preference elicitation or advance care planning will support delivery of responsive care to meet preferences. Obtaining longer-term data across diverse ethnic groups is needed in future research.
topic Patient preference
Frail elderly
Aged
Patient-centered care
Palliative care
Cohort studies
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12877-020-01725-2
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